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6y 
George CU. 3irau6 
S§'t326frS/g.8a 



(?1 







A Calendar of the 326th Field Signal Battalion 


January 


16, 


1918 — Organized at Camp Wadsworth, 


Nov. 23, 1918- 


-Moved to Virton, Belgium. 






Spartanburg, S. C. 


Dec. 5, 1918- 


—Moved to Grevenmacher, Lux- 


August 


7, 


1918— Left Camp Wadsworth for Port 




emburg. 






of Embarkation, Newport News, 


Dec. 14, 1918- 


-Moved to Wittlich, Germany. 






Virginia. 


March 12, 1919- 


—Reviewed by Major General 


August 


14, 


1918— Left United States onboard U. 




William G. Haan. 






S. S. Koningin den Nederlanden. 


April 25, 1919- 


-Reviewed by General Pershing. 


August 


25, 


1918 — Arrived at Brest, France. 


May 2ff; 1919- 


-Left Wittlich, Germany. 


August 


29, 


191 8 — Left Pon tanezen Barracks, Brest. 


May 28, 1919- 


-Arrived at Sable-sur-Sarthe, 


Sept. 


2, 


1918 — Arrived at Remiremont, Vosges, 




France. 






( Village of Seux )and assigned to 


June 9, 1919- 


—Left Sable-sur-Sarthe for Brest. 






the 7th Army Corps. 


June 17, 1919- 


-Left Brest, France onboard U. 


Sept. 


6, 


1918— Moved to Victor Caserne, St. 




S. S. Mobile. 






Etienne. 


June 27, 1919- 


-.\rrived at Hobokcn and Camp 


Nov. 


8, 


1918 — Moved to Rambluzin, Meuse. 




Merritt, N. J. 


Nov. 


17, 


1918 — Moved to Laheycourt and 
Noyers. 


June 29, 1919- 


-Battalion split into Casual De- 
tachments. 


Nov. 


21, 


1918 — Moved to Dun-sur-Meuse. 


July 3, 1919- 


—Final reports and returns made. 






(g'CI A 


- :; (! () 1 4 





'W'V du 19,^ 



'VvO I 



INTRODUCTION 



p^p^3Jtp 


1 



F YOU were guaranteed another such 
trip as Serf,'eant Strauh has sketched 
here would you re-enhst? Or is once 
enougli hut not too much? This brings 
up the sul)ject of the next war, for 

which we all have our own plans, no 

doubt. After those four days in Ilommes 4(), Chevaux 8 
from Brest to Remircniont, some of us concluded that 
we'd be cbevau.c in the next war; they don't travel so 
numerously, and tliey'rc used to sleeping on their 
feet. So far as is known the only man of the 326 who 
had a good .sleep during those four days was Woyti- 
sek, who stretched his belt out full length, passed it 
around a stanchion and under his arms, and slept. 
He needn't worry aljout the next war, with such 
talent. Besides, he'll probably have lots of room in 
his Homme.s 40, because the rest of us are either going 
to be horses or officers. 

Some even say that the next war will be "For 
Officers Only", but that remark must be discounted 
a bit, being a direct steal from a sign frequently seen 
in the A. E. F. There is some basis for the opinion, 
however, for the officers have an easier time of it than 



even the cheraux. There was Lt. Kahn, for instance, 
who ran (it .seemed as if he were running, didn't it?) 
.so cheerily at the head of the column on that hike into 
the mud around Rambluzin and Benoit-Vaux. He 
didti't have a |)ack with three blankets and a bed sack 
and rations and an overcoat and a leather jerkin and 
a few things like that to carry. Of course, we didn't 
carry them all the way — they were dumped in a 
Frenchman's cart and got lost up near Verdun, where 
they shook with the noise of the guns. Those packs 
got further into action than the rest of the 326, which 
is a shame. 

Then there was our Major, Simpson. He was so 
successful in his anti-tobacco crusade at Remiremont 
that he was promoted to Lt.-Col. and left us in a 
cloud of smokes. Various other officers got balled up 
and left us for one reason or another, and Lt. Duncan, 
having failed to get a tran.sfer to the infantry, dashed 
to Company C, which he tried to prove to himself and 
the company was the next best thing. 

jVIeantime the non-officers were making various 
discoveries, such as the cost of cognac (yes, it is pro- 
nounced "coney-ac") in francs and days in the guard- 



house; liow to say "Promenade? Mademoiselle?"; 
how to get everytiiiuf;; hut their eyes under cover 
when tiie (iernian ])lane came over; where to buy 
chocolate; that the French children would beg ciga- 
rette like this; "Cigarette? Cigarette?" and smoke 
them too; and many other essentials. 

One of the greatest discoveries was that of the 
French name for cheese, which is fniiinitje. We all 
soon liked the French condensation of assorted odors 
called /romfl.(/e. One man, however, forgot the name 
just as he got in the shop, and after much stuttering 
grabbed his nose, made a terrible face, and did a 
circle with his forefinger. Then, all smiles of com- 
prehension, symjiathy and eagerness to be of service, 
Madame took him by the arm and led him out to the 
family latrine. 

That was worth going all the way to France for — 
and it wasn't the only or the first time that we made 
startling discoveries in unexpected ways. For in- 
stance, what the Y entertainer had in the pocketbook 
she droppetl at Coblenz — but that, to quote Kipling, 
is another story. 

After the Battle of Remiremont those who sur- 
vived the hike and didn't drown in the nmd and 
didn't get sent off on telegraph, telephone or wireless 



details amused themselves and kept the officers out 
of mischief by policing up the woods. .Vt least that's 
what we gave out we were doing, but the chief prod- 
ucts of our searches were souvenirs and such essen- 
tials as fire-building materials in the form of dead 
branches and live cartridges. About this time, also, 
numerous experts in shirt-reading develo])ed. The 
result of stopping in an open ])lace in the woods to 
read a shirt was a high rate of mortality. 

Though none of us hatl any dope except the usual 
rumors, we were only marking time for the .Vrinistice, 
wliich we heard al)out l)rigiit and early on the morn- 
ing of November 11. .Vfter we had listened to the 
ofliicial French, (lerman, and English wireless dis- 
patches ringing the bell on the fight we gave a yell — 
and resumed the hunt. From that time on more and 
more of us began to do real work, until the Top 
Sergeants had terrible times picking K. P.'s. This, 
and a striking .scarcity of mail, ]>ained us exceedingly, 
but insteatl of moving west, each jump took us north. 
We were "picked troops for the Armj' of Occupation". 

Would you have missed it? Dun-sur-Meuse, for 
instance. Straub couldn't show it in his sketches, but 
it was there, in a shell hole in a German graveyard, 
that a new use was discovered for Signal Cori)s pliers. 



They iiiiikc good soiivcnir-tootli pullers. The iiiiiii 
who extracted the Geniuiii tooth says he is going to 
patent a muffler to absorb the disagreeable moist 
dock that you hear when a tootli comes out of a 
decayed socket. It was here, too, that one of the 
Mess Sergeants sought distraction from his troubles 
by cane-hunting in the trenches. The cane was 
mostly buried in some fresh earth and it had a grand 
handle entirely. Remembering tales of man-traps, 
he scoured about for some wire, respectfully lassoed 
the cane, retired hastily to the other end of the wire, 
and, holding his breath, pidled. He got neither a 
cane nor an explosion — only a handle. 

Virion came next, where the people were so glad to 
see us and waved home-made flags of dress-goods and 
even of paper. Here Aeting-Top Sergeant Hegna of 
Co. A earned fame by ])icking some .seven men as 
"available for K. P." and crowning the indignity by 
posting their names where all could see. 

After Virton came Grevenmacher, which mostly 
seemed bewildered — and more commercial in the 
matter of souvenirs. Then came Germany and Witt- 
lich with its billets, the l)est the 3''2(i had yet struck. 
Some of us seemed to think that (lermany should be 
given credit for those billets, and that it was a pretty 



nice country. Of course it's natural to curse out a 
place where we have didiculties, even though they 
may not be the fault of the place. Also it's natural 
to like a country where we have better treatment, 
c\en though the im|)n)Vcnienl is due to the fact 
that the country is unlouched t)y the war; that we 
took what we wanted, as c()n(|uerors; and that the 
(iernians faithfully obeyed the propagandist "look 
pleasant" orders from their own leaders on the other 
side of the Rhine. 

It was a long wait at Wittlich, enlivened by Paris 
leaves and other distractions, but we finally got out of 
there, and now we're where we belong. To each one of 
us these sketches will bring varied memories, back in 
the ease of home. What we have been through has 
been too big U> \h- grasjjcd all at once. Perhai)s on 
the s[)ot we were too busy — even kicking — to "get" 
it all; |)erhaps we were too harassed, loo much in the 
midst of things, to get the proper perspective. 

Here is your chance, men of the 'H('). Take a look 
at your trip from American eyes, from your eyes, 
from those eyes set comfortably in your own head and 
that head and all the rest of you sitting i)retty right 
at home. 

Corp. S. Ward Seeley. 



Copyright 1919, by George W. Straub 



■i 







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PAGE SEVEN 



J_jisillusioned but not 
telling the folks — 
First day in the 
army 



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y hr chow line al 
Camp Wadswortli 



PAGE EIGHT 




y he morning of the 
tenth day 



PAGE NINE 



CjtjiM . 1.1 j M 't' » " !■« >« M l I I 'l I I P I 1 ) 1 _ , , 



■??;^^: 




/^tick's promenade- 
on the Koningin 
den Nederlanden 



PAGE TEN 




y^/(d Jim blew that 
damned horn 
all day 



PAGE ELEVEN 




(j p the valley 
in ihe Vosges 



J- A G E TWELVE 




Posl No. 1 

Caserne Victor 



PAGE THIRTEEN 




rn'M 



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^3/. Etienne — where 
pomme de terre and 
manure were heaped 
high 



PAGE FOURTEEN 



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f^'£'*!*«''l^'*« #V 51 




J^iggest in town 
for 45 centimes 



PAGE FIFTEEN 




yy herever the loaf, 
there also the 
bottle 



PAGE SIXTEEN 



1 -./-' 



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f-^' — .^ d ._ in 



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Everybody helped 



who could 



PAGE SEVENTEEN 




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ff . ^ <; 



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/-jere's tvhere we used 
to meet 'em 



PAGE EIGHTEEN 



i 



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_^ Sunday 
soccer game 



PAGE NINETEEN 



^i;^''' y[.#^ 







f/y ee, icee, 
promenade 
sits swar" 



PAGE TWENTY 




j^ little miaeri/ 
for the rest 



PAGE T VV E N T Y - O N E 






m 
II 




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y he furlough 
everlasting 



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PAGE TWENTY TWO 




J he little frogs 
always followed 



PAGE TWENTY-THREE 




]_^eft on the Western 
front irhen 
Russia quit 



PAGE T W E N T Y - F O U R 



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uncomfortable ton 



PAGE T W E N T Y - !•• 1 V E 




y sleep wilh 
the horses 



P A G K T W F: N" T Y - S I X 




J\€miremont ; 
a serious 
occupation f 



p \ (, i; 1 w i; X 1 "1 ^ i: \ i: .\ 







(j p the mountain 



Ki^i^ij^/^ M-'^ >^\ 



PAGE T W E N T Y - E I G H T 




l^e leave 

Remiremont 



PAGE TWENTY-NINE 




]~lrU (til wheels — 
" l[(innneii 40 
Cheaiii.r 8 " 



PAGE THIRTY 








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then hiked 



PAGE THIRTY-ONE 



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JyJ lid and rain- 
nothing else 



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and coolies 



PAGE THIRTY- THREE 



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PAGE THIRTY. FOUR 



J^oys who paid all 



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village near 
Verdun 



PAGE THIRTY FIVE 



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were in the 
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PAGE T H I R T Y - S I X 





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y^ cross road village 
near Verdun 



PAGE THIRTY- EIGHT 












11 



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j^rgonne prisoners 
at Souilly, 
November, 1918 



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PAGE THIRTY NINE 




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back of our camp 



PAGE FORTY 



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of Souilly 



PAGE FORTY-ONE 




marching back to 
Bar le Due 



PAGE FORTY-TWO 



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they fell 



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PAGE FORTY -THREE 




y hat icnr-relicf, cafe 
at Noyers 



PACK K O R T Y - F O U R 




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J nst another C Co. 
orderly room 



PAGE FORTY- FIVE 



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PAGE FORTY -SIX 









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(jone West 



PAGE FORTY- SEVEN 




J^uxuriant quarters 



PAGE FORTY-EIGHT 



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yf^hijiTpet tanks 
at Varennes 



PAGE F O R T Y . N' I N E 


















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/yjopped up by th 
Yanks N. E. 
of Verdun 



PAGE FIFTY 




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M. P. looking 
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PAGE FIFTY. ONE 



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j^long the river 
at Dun 



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PAGE F I F T Y - T W O 










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T5>^wtA^ --(la^ 'HLu<.''-f^- 



(yne of many such 



PAGE F I F T Y - T H R E E 




^■^fler four years' exile 
in Belgium; the 
return home 



PAGE FIFTY -FOUR 




Jl-'J 



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O'*^ "/ 



war s crimes 



PAGE K I F T Y - F I V E 




f/y here Johnnie 
ruled sxipreme 



PAGE FIFTY -SIX 




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y he walled old upper 
town of 
Dun-sur-Meuse 



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PAGE FIFTY -SEVEN 




"•■^■'^/:§?-.^,.- 










- sK \i-t>tv"j 



J^eaucoup 

boche souvenirs 



PAGE FIFTY-EIGHT 




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(yid gateway at Dun 



PAGE FIFTY-NINE 









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y /(06-e 6/r(/.y ei)6?i 
/wrf stoves in 'em 



PAGE SIXTY 




(jrareyard of a 
German flying 
circus near 
Longwy 



PAGE S I X T Y - O N E 



(j-erman howitzers 




PAGE 3 I X T V - T W O 




(_^ hopped to pieces by 
their own pilots, 
scores of them 



PAGE SIXTY THREE 




J^ el gill III — odd clocks 
and grain coffee 



PAGE SIXTY- FOUR 




£)id you 

understand him? 



PAGE SIXTY -FIVE 






:W.J. 





(ydd, quaint 
cobbled streets 



PAGE S I X T Y - S 1 X 




(j-erman ipoxinded — 
meander lohat they 
thought ? 



PAGE SIXTY-SEVEN 




■^r/T^'" 



'iJ' t^y^'^. 



(jfCn. Haan speaking 
— Thanksgiving 
Day — Virion 



PAGE SIXTY -EIGHT 




f-'J/hcre "Schnapps' 
that powerful 
enemy, iras fint 
met and downed 



PAGE S I X T Y ■ N I N E 









■■'^ 







W'^t I 




J[(iin, stinking hay, 
misery; C Co.'s 
quarters 



PAGE SEVENTY 




J[/[aking for 
the Rhine 






PAGE SEVENTY-ONE 




J-' erfiuaders going 
into Germany 



PAGE SEVENTY -TWO 








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irasti't it 



PAGE S K V E N T Y ■ T H R E E 



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y^ corner most 
familiar 



PAGE SEVENTY-FOUR 






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at last 



PAGE SEVENTY-FIVE 



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PAGE SEVENTY. SIX 



J he Corps' Telegraph 
office— Wittlich 



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y^ Co. Radio Room 

— Wittlich 



PAGE S E V E N T Y . S E V E N 




£±e sez to me, 

sez he " 



PAGE SEVENTY-EIGHT 













jj ome birds 



PAGE SEVENTY -NINE 




£^ riend of the 
mess sergeants 



T-^icsSi',. 



PAGE EIGHTY 



.>& 












Pill l'MM#* i^# '-^ ^1 ly ^ ": ' . .,^ „ 










_/ /je oW Roman gate 
at Treir 



'>v'>'n )*v-}i*, -"7-te'-"- 



PAGE EIGHTY-ONE 







J^ ormerly the Kaiser's 



PAGE E I G H T Y - T W () 



.......^^aff-"-' 





















^r 



: , ij^Xvy^— 







(^astle crowned, 
terraced hills at 
every turn 



PAGE EIGHTY -THREE 




J^own the Rhine, 
•past the Loreley 



PAGE EIGHTY -FOUR 






iM-'^ 




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wn 




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j3" P' 

m 






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y^ rnerican " bimp " 
on Ehrenbreitstein 



PAGE EIGHTY- FIVE 



/v hrenbreitstein 
Coblenz 




Tr^P^TT" 



V. 

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PAGE E 1 G H 1 V - S I X 




^ peak to 'em, dice 



PAGE EIGHTY- SEVEN 




(^od's country at last 



PAGE EIGHT YEIGHT 



AND NOW that our story 
is ended, comes the overpower- 
ing temptation to make the 
eagle scream. So, as our French 
friends used to cry: 

^'Vive r Amerique'''' 
















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JAN 79 

I. MANCHESTER 
NDIANA 46962 



m='''^ N. MANCHESTER, 




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